Fund Confirms Investment in Mainstream Renewable Power in Africa

Construction of Noupoort Wind farm, another project of Mainstream Renewable Power in South Africa, in 2015. (Photo: MainstreamRP)

July 28, 2016 ─ Global wind and solar company Mainstream Renewable Power announces the closing of the $117.5 million investment deal which was signed in June, subject to shareholder approval. The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, a private grantmaking foundation, has confirmed it is part of the investor consortium, contributing $10 million. Mainstream is investing $177.5 million of equity in the Lekela Power platform, of which $117.5 will come from RBF and the other investors, and $60 million from Mainstream itself.

The investment will finance Mainstream’s continued expansion of the Lekela Power platform, a joint venture with private equity firm Actis. The funding package will help Lekela meet its goal of constructing over 1.3GW of new power capacity in Africa by 2018, while addressing the challenge of climate change.

Mainstream Renewable Power CEO Eddie O’Connor said, “The teaming up of the world’s leading independent renewable power developer with a foundation started by members of the family that effectively founded the global oil industry, is a significant moment in the world’s transition to a new power system based on clean energy.

He adds: “Providing electricity for the people of Africa requires huge investments and is an opportunity to re-kindle growth and help the world economy overcome secular stagnation. We hope this will be the first investment of many from impact investors in this sector.”

Stephen Heintz, president of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund said: “I am very pleased the RBF will invest in Mainstream, an investment sourced by our Outsourced Chief Investment Officer, Perella Weinberg Partners, which will bring renewable energy to communities across Africa. I’m confident that if John D. Rockefeller were alive today, he too would recognize the enormous opportunities in the clean energy economy and be at the forefront of the global shift to renewable resources.”

The deal will allow Lekela to continue to build its pipeline of wind and solar projects in Africa. The platform plans to build four more wind farms in South Africa, a wind farm and two solar plants in Egypt, as well as wind farms in Senegal and Ghana.

Mainstream and Lekela are helping to fulfill the objectives of a series of key international initiatives, including the Obama administration’s Power Africa, which aims to add 30,000MW of cleaner power generation through government and private partnerships, and the UN’s Sustainable Energy for All, which seeks to achieve universal access to power by 2030. Energy poverty has been recognized as one of the key challenges for Africa, with an estimated two thirds of people in Sub-Saharan Africa having no regular access to electricity.

First Avenue Partners acted as global placement agent for the transaction.